Wednesday, November 07, 2012
1:30:07 AM
What is a
herd?
A herd or tribe is any organization of two or more
people who come together for any purpose. A herd can be as small as two people
sharing an apartment to all of humanity. Most people belong to hundreds of
herds and will move in and out of different herds throughout their lifetimes. A
herd is any organization of people who share some common function. Herds
include all religions, governments at all levels including neighborhood
associations, sports fans, clubs, political parties, chat rooms, talk radio
fans, Mackintosh owners, fellow employees, Mensans, hippies, bars, nerds, and
schools. Each of the organizations have a set of rules and common beliefs. The
members of the organizations all surrender part of their Master Database to the
herd. The herd itself becomes a living organism much the same way a hive is a
living organism of bees. And in many cases these tribal organizations are as
real or more real than the individuals that make them up.
For example, if you are a Christian, you are expected
to believe in Jesus. If you don't believe in Jesus, what's the point in being a
Christian? As a Christian, you might join a specific denomination of
Christianity and become a member of a specific church. As a church member, you
are expected to attend church on Sunday morning. You are expected to dress up
and give them 10% of your money. The preacher is in charge and you are expected
to listen to the sermon. When he says to stand and pray, you stand and pray. If
he leads the congregation in prayer, then you all pray together. When you sing,
you all sing together. When he says stand, everyone stands. When he says sit,
everyone sits. When he says to speak in tongues, someone will get up and speak
in tongues. And when he says vote Republican, everyone votes Republican.
In order to be a member of the herd, the member has
to surrender control of part of their thinking and decision making process to
the group consciousness. In the case of clubs, the punishment for individuality
is denial of membership. In the case of government they might take away your
money or freedom. In the case of religion, you risk losing your eternal soul
and roasting in Hell forever. Membership in the herd gives an individual a
sense of community and family. An individual develops standing and social position
within the tribe and that sense of group acceptance is necessary of the
psychological well being of that person. An individual who would challenge the
powers that be within the herd risks losing the benefits of and encoring the
wrath of the herd. There is a price to pay, and if the individual isn't willing
to pay that price then they have to accept the herd's domination of that part
of their Master Database.
ROGER H. COOPER MSG USA RET
CAVTROOPER5981
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